Yevgeny Primakov, in full Yevgeny Maksimovich Primakov
(born October 29, 1929, Kiev, U.S.S.R. [now in Ukraine]—died June 26, 2015, Moscow, Russia), Russian politician who served as prime minister of Russia (1998–99).

Primakov grew up with his mother in Tbilisi, Georgia, then a republic of the Soviet Union. (He kept his early years cloaked in secrecy and would neither confirm nor deny reports that his parents were Jewish, that his father had vanished in a Stalinist purge, or that he had changed his surname from Finkelshteyn to avoid anti-Semitic unpleasantries.) Possessing a flair for the Arabic language, Primakov went to Moscow, where he graduated from the Institute of Oriental Studies in 1953 and received a candidate degree in economics from the M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University in 1956. He joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1959. From 1962 to 1970 Primakov worked for Pravda, the party’s daily newspaper, as a Middle East specialist, columnist, and deputy editor. During this period he developed close relations with numerous influential Arab leaders.

In 1970 Primakov was named deputy director of the Institute of World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO), the country’s top foreign policy think tank, and in 1977 he was appointed director of the Institute of Oriental Studies. He became director of IMEMO in 1985. A leading architect of the policy of perestroika (“restructuring”), he worked closely with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and continued to rise in the government and the Communist Party, becoming a candidate member of the Politburo, the policy-making body of the party, in 1989. As his political standing rose, however, Primakov suffered personal setbacks, losing both his son and his first wife to heart disease in the 1980s. Serving as a special envoy, he spearheaded Gorbachev’s efforts to set up talks with Iraqi leader Ṣaddām Ḥussein in the Persian Gulf War standoff, and in the fall of 1991 he was made first deputy to the director of the Committee for State Security (KGB) and head of its First Directorate (foreign intelligence). The KGB was disbanded a few months later, but Primakov went on to head one of its post-Soviet successor agencies, the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, until Russian Pres. Boris Yeltsin appointed him foreign minister in 1996.

In September 1998 Yeltsin appointed Primakov prime minister, a decision that was greeted with a mixture of relief and skepticism. Forced to compromise on a candidate acceptable to both the impatient reformers and hard-core communists in the Duma (the lower house of parliament), Yeltsin had tapped Primakov, many thought, for his acceptability rather than his qualifications. The idea of a former intelligence chief as prime minister rang warning bells in the West, owing to Primakov’s tough pro-Russian, anti-NATO, and pro-Arab positions.

Primakov proved to be popular in Russia, and he handled the country’s peace efforts in Kosovo (seeKosovo conflict). Eight months into Primakov’s premiership, however, Yeltsin fired him, claiming that Primakov had failed to map out a concrete economic plan. To contest Yeltsin, Primakov led the Fatherland–All Russia bloc in the December 1999 Duma elections, but his party won fewer seats than Unity, the party backed by Yeltsin. Primakov was a contender in the 2000 presidential race but later dropped out because of a declining political base. He left his party when it aligned with Unity in 2001. Primakov served on several diplomatic missions under Pres. Vladimir Putin. He later became the president of the Russian Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

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